In Adelaide, the wife of Dr. Brian Cowper, Jill Cowper, is writing her thesis at home for her Master's in Anthropology. When the plumber, Max, arrives unexpectedly to do a routine check and maintenance of the the bathroom pipes, Jill is stuck alone at home with the strange, talkative stranger.

''The Plumber'' which Mr. Weir wrote and directed, is both comedy and nightmare. It watches the title character arrive insolently at the household of two thin-skinned academic types who haven't summoned him, and follows the process by which he dismantles their bathroom and drives them half-mad. The story begins innocently enough - despite such ominous shots as that of the plumber's black-gloved hand pressing an elevator button - when this bedraggled longhair arrives at the door and persuades the young wife (Judy Morris) that her bathroom needs fixing. Soon, though, she suspects there may be something amiss. Strange noises are coming from the bathroom, the sound of someone singing. She begins to suspect the plumber may be taking a shower.

Written and directed by Peter Weir, The Plumber, is both comedy and nightmare. It watches the title character arrive insolently at the household of two thin-skinned academic types who haven't summoned him, and follows the process by which he dismantles their bathroom and drives them half-mad.

Son of a Plumber is an album released by Swedish pop-rock singer and composer Per Gessle. It is the first album by Gessle to use a different artist name; Son of a Plumber. The album, which was officially released on 23 November 2005[1], is a double CD album packed with deeply personal and highly inventive music according to Gessle

Life on Earth: A Natural History by David Attenborough is a television natural history series made by the BBC in association with Warner Bros. and Reiner Moritz Productions. It was transmitted in the UK from 16 January 1979. During the course of the series presenter David Attenborough, following the format established by Kenneth Clark's Civilisation and Jacob Bronowski's The Ascent of Man (both series which he designed and produced as director of BBC2), travels the globe in order to trace the story of the evolution of life on the planet. Like the earlier series, it was divided into 13 programmes (each of around 55 minutes' duration). The executive producer was Christopher Parsons and the music was composed by Edward Williams. Highly acclaimed, it is the first in Attenborough's 'Life' series of programmes and was followed by The Living Planet (1984). It established Attenborough as not only the foremost television naturalist, but also an iconic figure in British cultural life.

A young woman begins to have nightmares where she believes that time stands still and she can see and hear future events. In her nightmares she keeps seeing an evil bald man. Her doctor can't figure out what is happening, but a government agent who hears about her visions tries to help her, as he is investigating a plane crash that appears to involve the bald man she keeps seeing.

One week in a life of Branimir Mitrovic "Floyd", a young rally driver from the National Class (up to 785cc), dreaming of promotion to the higher category. He lives a carefree life of a Belgrade dandy boy, neglecting his girlfriend, avoiding his draft calls, and refusing to deal with any life responsibility in general. The decisive race on Saturday is only what he cares about.

Sonny Steele used to be a rodeo star, but his next appearance is to be on a Las Vegas stage, wearing a suit covered in lights, advertising a breakfast cereal. When he finds out they are going drug the horse in case its too frisky, he rides off into the desert…